Reflecting On the Impact Of The ADA

Monday, July 29, 2019 at 7:00 AM

By Mary Schuermann Kuhlman, Indiana News Service

Peter Berg with the Great Lakes ADA Center, says one area that needs improvement in the ADA is information technology,

(Indianapolis, Ind.) - Legislation that has changed the lives of millions of Americans, including more than one in ten Hoosiers, marks its 29th anniversary today. The Americans with Disabilities Act was signed into law on June 26, 1990, and is considered the most significant piece of civil-rights legislation since the Civil Rights Act of 1964. 

Peter Berg with the Great Lakes ADA Center, which serves Indiana explains in 2008, the bill was amended to clarify the definition of 'disability,' and provide broad protection from discrimination. And he notes as the world changes, the law needs continued updating.

"Within the last five [to] eight years, the Department of Justice revised its regulations covering state and local governments, and private businesses," says Berg. "It also issued updated accessibility standards. It went a long way in attempting to unify the ADA standards with other industry standards."

The ADA aims to ensure that people with physical or mental disabilities have the same rights and opportunities as others in all areas of public life - including employment, education and transportation. While the law has transformed accommodations for many with disabilities, some advocates contend the country must be committed to fulfilling the full promise of the ADA, by working to create a more inclusive society.

Berg says one area that needs improvement in the ADA is information technology, since it was implemented at a time when the internet didn't exist.

"There are no accessibility standards that apply to technology," says Berg. "There could be some room to issue standards that say, 'OK, this is what an accessible website is. This is what an accessible kiosk is, and this is what an accessible app is.'"

Recently, two retail organizations asked the U.S. Supreme Court to take a case involving a blind customer who sued Domino's Pizza because its website and mobile app were not accessible to people using screen-reading software. 

Research conducted by the international law firm Seyfarth Saw found website-accessibility lawsuits rose from about 800 in 2017 to 22-hundred in 2018.

More from Local News

Comments

Add a comment

Log in to the club or enter your details below.
Rating *

Events

Governor Braun Celebrates One Month of Cheapest Gas in the Country

AAA Fuel Prices show that Indiana has the cheapest regular gasoline of any state in the country

Fourth of July Events in Eagle Country

There are lots of ways to celebrate our Independence

Dearborn County Indiana Farm Bureau Insurance Welcomes New Agent

The new agent is a Jac-Cen-Del HS graduate.

SCAI Names Individual, Team Academic All-State Teams

EC, Milan, Rising Sun and JCD were represented.

Nine Local Stars Earn All-State Honors

The Softball Coaches Association of Indiana recently released their 2026 All-State Teams

SEI Hoop Stars Compete at All-Star Classic

South Dearborn, Batesville, South Ripley and East Central were represented

On Air

Joe Nichols Home Run 2:22
Randy Travis 1982 2:19
Toby Keith Whiskey Girl 2:13
Russell Dickerson God Gave Me A Girl 2:10